Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Communitie­s are seeing plummeting demand for coronaviru­s testing.

Some communitie­s are closing once-busy sites

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — Just five weeks ago, Los Angeles County was conducting more than 350,000 weekly coronaviru­s tests, including at a massive drive-thru site at Dodger Stadium, as health workers raced to contain the worst COVID-19 hotspot in the U.S.

Now, county officials say testing has nearly collapsed. More than 180 government-supported sites are operating at only a third of their capacity.

“It’s shocking how quickly we’ve gone from moving at 100 miles an hour to about 25,” said Dr. Clemens Hong, who leads the county’s testing operation.

After a year of struggling to boost testing, communitie­s across the country are seeing plummeting demand, shuttering testing sites or even trying to return supplies.

The drop in screening comes at a significan­t moment in the outbreak: Experts are cautiously optimistic that COVID-19 is receding after killing more than 500,000 people in the U.S. but concerned that emerging variants could prolong the pandemic.

“Everyone is hopeful for rapid, widespread vaccinatio­ns, but I don’t think we’re at a point where we can drop our guard just yet,” said Hong. “We just don’t have enough people who are immune to rule out another surge.”

U.S. testing hit a peak on Jan. 15, when the country was averaging more than 2 million tests per day. Since then, the average number of daily tests has fallen more than 28 percent. The drop mirrors declines across all major virus measures since January, including new cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths.

Officials say those encouragin­g trends, together with harsh winter weather, the end of the holiday travel season, pandemic fatigue and a growing focus on vaccinatio­ns, are sapping interest in testing.

“When you combine all those together you see this decrease,” said Dr. Richard Pescatore of the health department in Delaware, where daily testing has fallen more than 40 percent since the January peak. “People just aren’t going to go out to testing sites.”

But testing remains important for tracking and containing the outbreak.

L.A. County is opening more testing options near public transporta­tion, schools and offices to make it more convenient. And officials in Santa Clara County are urging residents to “continue getting tested regularly,” highlighti­ng new mobile testing buses and pop-up sites.

President Joe Biden has promised to revamp the nation’s testing system by investing billions more in supplies and government coordinati­on. But with demand falling fast, the country may soon have a glut of unused supplies. The U.S. will be able to conduct nearly 1 billion monthly tests by June, according to projection­s from researcher­s at Arizona State University. That’s more than 25 times the country’s current rate of about 40 million tests reported per month.

 ?? Sean McKeag ?? The Associated Press Pharmacist Mike Ruane of Scranton, Pa., talks Friday to patients at a drive-thru vaccinatio­n clinic at Scranton High School.
Sean McKeag The Associated Press Pharmacist Mike Ruane of Scranton, Pa., talks Friday to patients at a drive-thru vaccinatio­n clinic at Scranton High School.

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